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  • Nov. 1, 1793
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  • ON FASHION.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Nov. 1, 1793: Page 18

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Page 18

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

On Fashion.

ON FASHION .

. TO THE PRINTER OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE . has been more frequently asserted than demonstratedthat

IT ,, the depravity of morals in the present age exceeds that of the preceding , and that the world grows still more corrupt in proportion as it grows older . This postulate is , - indeed , so generally received , that it appears an act of presumption to attempt to combat the idea . But unlessi some one be fotind to enter the lists , the matter may be subtilized ;

and so instilled into the minds of those vvho w . ill not be at the trouble of thinking for themselves , that it would be no wonder tci me , if in the course of another century , it should , by representing ; the matter of moral amendment as a desperate case , deaden all sense of shame in mankind ; and gradually underrtiiue what yet remains of Morality .

, . It would better become the moralist to administer instruction of a stimulative kind , - to set before the eyes of men the fairer side of the . picture , and thus encourage art ardour of emulation worthy of the age . —Yes , I repeat it , worthy of the age ; for ; very far am I from Relieving that at any time there has been less vice in the aggregate of . men than is found at present . Between Vice and Folly ( though

they are too often confounded in our ideas ) there is a . very eminent distinction : the one is of a fatal tendency , is punished here , and , we believe ; will be hereafter ; the other is seldom ivdrse than ridiculous ^' and commonlyinduces its own punishment ; , , , . Folly , Sir , is the Fashion , and Fashion ( which , tis I understand the word , means no more than that slavish obedience which men to the inions and habits of their fellow-creatures ; without

pay op concerning themselves about the propriety of them ) , I will allow was perhaps at no time more prevalent than it is at present . Men at an earlief period mig ht ; and did more than now ; think for themselves ; but perhaps not to a better purpose , nor always to purposes so harmless as those to which our tyrant Fashion conduces . It is into Fashion , then , that we must look ftir the sotiffce of the

¦ fevil which it is our wish to see exterminated . . , . It appears that these complaints of degenenicy chiefly originate ? ¦ ivith peevish and debilitated mortals , who , if they ever possessed ' the faculty of pleasing , liav 6 with eld age contracted a rigidity , that forbids the proffer , of sympathetic Friendship , that shuns those de- ' lightful moments of social intercourse and generous communication $ jwhich the human heart expands tb receive every Sensation , - b $ * N

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1793-11-01, Page 18” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 26 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01111793/page/18/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE: OR, GENERAL and COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 2
A GENERAL CHARGE TO MASONRY. Article 7
A CHARGE Article 11
ON FASHION. Article 18
ANECDOTE OF PHILIP I. KING OF SPAIN. Article 20
COMMENTS ON STERNE. Article 21
THE ANTIQUITY OF DRINKING HEALTHS. Article 28
ANECDOTES OF DR. GOLDSMITH. Article 31
CHARACTER OF SIR ANTHONY BROWN. Article 38
ANECDOTES OF DR. JOHNSON, &c. Article 39
PRIVATE ANECDOTES OF ILLUSTRIOUS FRENCH CHARACTERS. Article 46
HOPE. Article 53
SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF JAMES HESELTINE, ESQ. G. T. Article 56
TO THE PRINTER OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, Article 58
THE HUMBLE ADDRESS OF THE MOST ANTIENT AND HONOURABLE SOCIETY OF FREE AND ACCEPTED MASONS, RESIDENT IN THE COUNTY OF LINCOLN. In GRAND LODGE assembled. Article 58
OF MAN's HAPPINESS. Article 59
A TALE. Article 60
ON THE STUDY OF THE ARTS AND SCIENCES. Article 64
THE CRUELTY OF A FATHER. Article 65
A VIEW OF THE PROGRESS OF NAVIGATION. Article 69
THE CHOICE OF ABDALA: Article 74
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 79
POETRY. Article 82
TO ARNO. Article 83
STANZAS Article 84
PROLOGUE TO THE WORLD IN A VILLAGE. Article 85
FOREIGN OCCURRENCES. Article 86
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 88
Untitled Article 91
Untitled Article 91
Untitled Article 91
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Page 18

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

On Fashion.

ON FASHION .

. TO THE PRINTER OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE . has been more frequently asserted than demonstratedthat

IT ,, the depravity of morals in the present age exceeds that of the preceding , and that the world grows still more corrupt in proportion as it grows older . This postulate is , - indeed , so generally received , that it appears an act of presumption to attempt to combat the idea . But unlessi some one be fotind to enter the lists , the matter may be subtilized ;

and so instilled into the minds of those vvho w . ill not be at the trouble of thinking for themselves , that it would be no wonder tci me , if in the course of another century , it should , by representing ; the matter of moral amendment as a desperate case , deaden all sense of shame in mankind ; and gradually underrtiiue what yet remains of Morality .

, . It would better become the moralist to administer instruction of a stimulative kind , - to set before the eyes of men the fairer side of the . picture , and thus encourage art ardour of emulation worthy of the age . —Yes , I repeat it , worthy of the age ; for ; very far am I from Relieving that at any time there has been less vice in the aggregate of . men than is found at present . Between Vice and Folly ( though

they are too often confounded in our ideas ) there is a . very eminent distinction : the one is of a fatal tendency , is punished here , and , we believe ; will be hereafter ; the other is seldom ivdrse than ridiculous ^' and commonlyinduces its own punishment ; , , , . Folly , Sir , is the Fashion , and Fashion ( which , tis I understand the word , means no more than that slavish obedience which men to the inions and habits of their fellow-creatures ; without

pay op concerning themselves about the propriety of them ) , I will allow was perhaps at no time more prevalent than it is at present . Men at an earlief period mig ht ; and did more than now ; think for themselves ; but perhaps not to a better purpose , nor always to purposes so harmless as those to which our tyrant Fashion conduces . It is into Fashion , then , that we must look ftir the sotiffce of the

¦ fevil which it is our wish to see exterminated . . , . It appears that these complaints of degenenicy chiefly originate ? ¦ ivith peevish and debilitated mortals , who , if they ever possessed ' the faculty of pleasing , liav 6 with eld age contracted a rigidity , that forbids the proffer , of sympathetic Friendship , that shuns those de- ' lightful moments of social intercourse and generous communication $ jwhich the human heart expands tb receive every Sensation , - b $ * N

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